It seems to me that the division of opinons on this thread is not between those who want health care for the poor and those who don’t – we all want health care for the poor – but between those who believe there is such a thing as a free lunch, and all you have to do is wave a magic wand to get it, and those who know that’s not true and are seeking economically sound ways to finance health care for the poor.
That is an amazingly silly statement. The problem is that health care is massively expensive and largely not optional. That is, it often comes down to ‘get treatment or die’.
So no matter what system you use, some folks are going to get a ‘free ride’. I’d have to look to get exact figures, but let’s say I pay $10,000 a year for an employee’s family medical coverage. After three years with me, mom and the kids are in a terrible traffic accident and wrack up $1.7M in medical bills. All of a sudden, poor me is paying significantly more for every member of the group. Does that make the family in question free loaders? Are the rest of us in the group plan victims?
Most folks with any semblence of a brain and concience would say no, we understand that we are sharing risk as a group and any of us could be the ones with a family fighting for its life.
This argument boils down to idolatry of a fiscal system to the point of blind faith, or acceptance of earthly reality. No matter how many times a conservative pundit thumps his chest, we already have clear evidence.
Right now, we have nationalized health care for the most expensive class of citizens (who also now are the wealthiest). And, for many decades it has outperformed private heath insurance in cost management and overhead. The only reason that it does not outperform today is that it is precluded, by law, from bargaining on drug costs, the highest source of inflation in medical care (for some reason that GOP did not believe in the free market that time). But, based on VA history, we know that group bargaining on drugs also works.
But, even with a collecitve bailout for the most expensive patients, our current private based insurance risk management system is the worst performing among industrialized nations. That is, we pay the most ($0.05 of every GDP dollar goes to administration in private insurance companies), and privide less care to fewer people.
This seriously effects us in many ways. We are less competitive in world markets and we have massive costs in leaving 40,000,000 off, or nearly off the system. Now, what makes the fiscal policies of the countries that pay less and get more (35-39 of them depending on whose numbers you use) irresponsible or impractical?
They demonstrably work. In terms of outperforming the private sector, our own nationalized health care system components actually work (remember, the medicare pool is the highest risk, most costly group in the nation).
So, “responsible”, in terms of spending less and getting more is clear. So the argument is ideological - policies that work, or blind devotion to the alter of selfishness and greed.